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Authen::SASL::Perl::GSSAPI(3) User Contributed Perl Documentation Authen::SASL::Perl::GSSAPI(3)

Authen::SASL::Perl::GSSAPI - GSSAPI (Kerberosv5) Authentication class

version 2.1800

  use Authen::SASL qw(Perl);
  $sasl = Authen::SASL->new( mechanism => 'GSSAPI' );
  $sasl = Authen::SASL->new( mechanism => 'GSSAPI',
                             callback => { pass => $mycred });
  $sasl->client_start( $service, $host );

This method implements the client part of the GSSAPI SASL algorithm, as described in RFC 2222 section 7.2.1 resp. draft-ietf-sasl-gssapi-XX.txt.

With a valid Kerberos 5 credentials cache (aka TGT) it allows to connect to service@host given as the first two parameters to Authen::SASL's client_start() method. Alternatively, a GSSAPI::Cred object can be passed in via the Authen::SASL callback hash using the `pass' key.

Please note that this module does not currently implement a SASL security layer following authentication. Unless the connection is protected by other means, such as TLS, it will be vulnerable to man-in-the-middle attacks. If security layers are required, then the Authen::SASL::XS GSSAPI module should be used instead.

The callbacks used are:

The authorization identity to be used in SASL exchange
The GSS mechanism to be used in the connection
The GSS credentials to be used in the connection (optional)

 #! /usr/bin/perl -w
 use strict;
use warnings;
 use Net::LDAP 0.33;
 use Authen::SASL 2.10;
 # -------- Adjust to your environment --------
 my $adhost      = 'theserver.bla.net';
 my $ldap_base   = 'dc=bla,dc=net';
 my $ldap_filter = '(&(sAMAccountName=BLAAGROL))';
 my $sasl = Authen::SASL->new(mechanism => 'GSSAPI');
 my $ldap;
 eval {
     $ldap = Net::LDAP->new($adhost,
                            onerror => 'die')
       or  die "Cannot connect to LDAP host '$adhost': '$@'";
     $ldap->bind(sasl => $sasl);
 };
 if ($@) {
     chomp $@;
     die   "\nBind error         : $@",
           "\nDetailed SASL error: ", $sasl->error,
           "\nTerminated";
 }
 print "\nLDAP bind() succeeded, working in authenticated state";
 my $mesg = $ldap->search(base   => $ldap_base,
                          filter => $ldap_filter);
 # -------- evaluate $mesg

The properties used are:

The maximum buffer size for receiving cipher text
The minimum SSF value that should be provided by the SASL security layer. The default is 0
The maximum SSF value that should be provided by the SASL security layer. The default is 2**31
The SSF value provided by an underlying external security layer. The default is 0
The actual SSF value provided by the SASL security layer after the SASL authentication phase has been completed. This value is read-only and set by the implementation after the SASL authentication phase has been completed.
The maximum plaintext buffer size for sending data to the peer. This value is set by the implementation after the SASL authentication phase has been completed and a SASL security layer is in effect.

Authen::SASL, Authen::SASL::Perl

Written by Simon Wilkinson, with patches and extensions by Achim Grolms and Peter Marschall.

Please report any bugs, or post any suggestions, to the perl-ldap mailing list <perl-ldap@perl.org>

Copyright (c) 2006 Simon Wilkinson, Achim Grolms and Peter Marschall. All rights reserved. This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.

2025-04-25 perl v5.40.2

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